Following are excerpts from an essay published in March 26 by the National Catholic Reporter. Reprinted by permission of NCR Publishing Company.
Use this link to read the essay in its entirety.
By Julie Schumacher Cohen
Published in the National Catholic Reporter
March 26, 2025
What do our Catholic social justice teachings call us to do in a moment when a family is being separated and which legal experts are calling one of the biggest threats to First Amendment freedom in 50 years?
This is the question we face when we consider the case of Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian graduate of Columbia University and green card holder who was arrested on March 8 by U.S. immigration agents. His wife, Noor Abdalla, an American citizen who is eight months pregnant with their first child, was also threatened with arrest.
Khalil had been a student leader, mediating between protesters and administrators, in the spring 2024 pro-Palestine protests at Columbia that spread nationwide calling for a Gaza ceasefire and divestment from Israel. Khalil was put in a Louisiana detention facility far from his family; a judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting him and ordered that his case be moved to New Jersey. …
The detainment of Khalil … and others must be understood in the context of this administration’s push for mass deportations. Pope Francis described the policy in a letter to the US bishops as one that “damages the dignity of many men and women, and of entire families, and places them in a state of particular vulnerability and defenselessness.” The treatment of Mahmoud Khalil has damaged the dignity of a family, separated by 1,200 miles as Khalil’s wife is soon to give birth.
In a statement, his wife Noor said, “We’ve been excitedly preparing to welcome our baby, and now Mahmoud has been ripped away from me for no reason at all.” She described her husband’s arrest as traumatizing: “US Immigration ripped my soul from me when they handcuffed my husband and forced him into an unmarked vehicle,” she wrote. …
The US Conference of Catholic Bishops — in a January statement on immigration reform — said “family unity should remain a cornerstone” of the US immigration system and “dehumanization or vilification of noncitizens as a means to deprive them of protection under law is not only contrary to the rule of law but an affront to God himself, who has created them in his own image.”
Such arrests and detentions must also be understood in the context of issues of free speech and due process, in regard to pro-Palestine activism and more broadly. It occurs, in part, as a result of an executive order Trump issued on Jan. 29 that laid the foundation for the government to deport international students who participated in protests against Israel’s actions in Gaza.
The Jesuit Conference’s Office of Justice and Ecology, echoing the US bishops, has asserted that immigration enforcement efforts “should be targeted, proportional, and humane,” prioritizing individuals who pose an actual “threat” as dangers to society and minimizing “reliance on detention.”
They and the US bishops have emphasized that “due process should be ensured.” And yet, Khalil is detained … with no criminal charge or conviction. His lawyer reports that the ICE officers told her by phone that they had a warrant to revoke a student visa (Khalil holds a green card and is a permanent legal US resident,) at the time of his apprehension. Noor said that neither she nor her husband were shown any warrant before he was taken away.
Due process requires an accurate and clear depiction of events. A fact sheet on the executive order explained that the Trump administration would “Deport Hamas sympathizers and revoke student visas” for all “resident aliens” who joined in “pro-jihadist” protests. It paints the campus protests with a broad brush, equating pro-Palestinian views and critique of Israel’s military assault on Gaza with being antisemitic and supporting Hamas. The anti-war demonstrations that took place on campuses, including at Catholic universities, were 97 percent peaceful and included many Jewish students.

Pope Francis also called for a ceasefire as early as Oct. 29, 2023. Catholic social teaching affirms the rights of conscience and the struggle for justice. We can look to examples of protest against injustice within the Jesuit and Catholic traditions, including the 1990s movement to shut down the US Army School of the Americas, which trained soldiers who participated in the killing of the Jesuits at the University of Central America in El Salvador.
Citing a section of federal immigration law, the administration has also asserted that Khalil is a foreign policy threat but has provided no details or evidence to back up the claim. Instead, they now argue that Khalil’s not having listed prior work with United Nations and UK agencies in his immigration application is grounds for deportation. His lawyers say the allegations are retaliation against his protected political speech. Protests can be unwieldy, and speech can be strident, but the right to free expression and free assembly are bedrock First Amendment principles that also apply to permanent legal residents and visa holders.
It is incumbent upon Catholics to raise our voices to keep families together from the threat of unlawful deportation and to support free expression, the right to nonviolent protest, and due process. In a letter from jail, Khalil wrote that “justice escapes the contours of this nation’s immigration facilities” and described his detention as indicative of broader anti-Palestinian racism and targeting of the right to protest for Palestine.
It is also incumbent upon Catholics to uphold the human rights of Palestinians, to reject antisemitism and Islamophobia, and to continue to push for a just peace that will bring safety, dignity and equality to all Palestinians and Israelis in the Holy Land.
The detention of Mahmoud Khalil — and suppression of voices in support of Palestinian freedom — makes those goals ever more distant.
On March 14, Pax Christi International released this statement in support of Mahmoud Khalil.


Thank you for being so clear about this awfully unjust situation. And that Pope Francis has spoken out about the total wrongness of ripping a family apart, let alone on bogus grounds.
Even young people in elementary age on up can see we should speak out against what the president and his advisors let ICE do to Mahmoud – kidnapping him, dragging him away from his very pregnant wife, sending him to a faraway detention, without the due process of a warrant for arrest from a judge!
Catholic school teachers have your junior high and high schoolers read this statement from Pax Christi international!
For sure, the academic world is convulsing over the detention of Khalil and now several other graduate students whom Big Brother has ensnarled (our premier academic newspaper The Chronicle of Higher Education provides a daily report on the latest detentions). Let’s be clear: our academic officers and their respective universities refuse to unite and oppose the current roundup of designated terrorist sympathizers. It’s much more confortable for our academic administrators, terrified of being brought before hostile subcommittees and beholden to their pro-Israel donors, to demonize the plain-clothes federal agents enforcing the orders of the Thought Police, but they could prevent and could have prevented these injustices. Alas, their terror of losing funding prevails over Justice. And that’s the slimy truth about our stinking ivory towers that are crumbling.
David-Ross Gerling, PhD
Once again, Trump is abusing his power, along with the ICE agents and others who do his bidding- just because Mahmoud is expressing an opinion he doesn’t like.
The arrest and detention of Mahmoud Kahlil is a frightening step. There was, as far as I know, no threat of violence expressed in Mr. Kahlil’s efforts to speak about the situation between Israel and Gaza. He was exercising every persons right to free expression. When a person expresses an opinion, since when is it a crime?
Silence is a friend of the oppressor. Action is the friend of the oppressed.
Peace and all good!